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August 08, 2006; 67 (3) Articles

Cognitive effects of lamotrigine compared with topiramate in patients with epilepsy

D. Blum, K. Meador, V. Biton, T. Fakhoury, B. Shneker, S. Chung, K. Mills, A. Hammer, J. Isojärvi
First published August 7, 2006, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000232737.72555.06
D. Blum
MD
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K. Meador
MD
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V. Biton
MD
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T. Fakhoury
MD
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B. Shneker
MD
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S. Chung
MD
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K. Mills
PhD
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A. Hammer
BS
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J. Isojärvi
MD, PhD
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Citation
Cognitive effects of lamotrigine compared with topiramate in patients with epilepsy
D. Blum, K. Meador, V. Biton, T. Fakhoury, B. Shneker, S. Chung, K. Mills, A. Hammer, J. Isojärvi
Neurology Aug 2006, 67 (3) 400-406; DOI: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000232737.72555.06

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Abstract

Objective: To compare the cognitive effects of lamotrigine vs topiramate as adjunctive therapy in adults with epilepsy.

Methods: A multicenter, double-blind, randomized, prospective study was conducted in adults with partial seizures. Lamotrigine or topiramate was introduced as an adjunctive therapy to carbamazepine or phenytoin and titrated over 8 weeks to target doses. These drugs were maintained another 8 weeks (maintenance phase) without dosage changes. The primary endpoint was change from screening to the end of the maintenance phase in a combined analysis of standardized measures of cognition (Controlled Oral Word Association Task [COWA]; Stroop Color–Word Interference; Digit Cancellation; Lafayette Grooved Pegboard, dominant hand; Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, delayed recall; and Symbol–Digit Modalities test).

Results: For the primary endpoint, cognitive performance at the end of the maintenance phase was better with lamotrigine than with topiramate (415.3 vs 315.1; p < 0.001). On the individual cognitive tests, performance was better with lamotrigine than with topiramate in mean changes from screening on the COWA (p < 0.001), Stroop Color–Word Interference (p = 0.038), and Symbol–Digit Modalities tests (p < 0.001). The treatment effect exceeded the minimum clinically important difference for the COWA and the Symbol–Digit Modalities test. Mean changes from screening in the Performance-On-Line test simulating driving skills reflected better performance with lamotrigine than with topiramate (p = 0.021). The median percentage change from baseline in seizure frequency was lower with lamotrigine than with topiramate during the escalation phase (−80% vs −100%; p = 0.028) but not during the maintenance phase (−75% vs −100%; p = 0.062). The frequencies of cognitive adverse events and of premature withdrawals related to cognitive decline were higher with topiramate than with lamotrigine (6% vs 0%; p = 0.013).

Conclusion: Lamotrigine had significantly less impact than topiramate on measures of cognition when used as adjunctive therapy for partial seizures.

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